Friday, April 8, 2022

Friday Phenomena

As the bright yellow thing in the sky returns into view, here are some things going on:

From National Review, Reuters again whitewashes terrorism.

From FrontpageMag, the gender cultists meet their resistance.

From Townhall, California seeks to permit non-citizens to become police officers.

From The Washington Free Beacon, dozens of Democrat congresscritters keep their offices closed due to the coronavirus.

From the Washington Examiner, according to the U.N., global food prices are at an all-time high due to the war in Ukraine.

From The Federalist, explosive testimony in Pennsylvania explains how left-wing money infiltrated election offices during 2020.

From American Thinker, President Biden is the doomsday scenario that we were warned about.

From CNS News, Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL) lists "notable moments" in black American history, including the late Justice Thurgood Marshall while excluding current Justice Clarence Thomas.

From LifeZette, the media is late to covering Hunter Biden's laptop.

From NewsBusters, the University of Pennsylvania rejected complaints from its female swimmers.

From Canada Free Press, former President Obama tries to rewrite his own roll in Russian history.

From TeleSUR, union workers in Peru protest for a higher minimum wage.

From TCW Defending Freedom, as thousands of illegal migrants cross the English Channel, where is the media?

From Snouts in the Trough, Russian President Putin warned NATO against expanding eastward.

From EuroNewsin a surprise move, Polish conservative party leader Jaroslaw Kaczyński harshly criticizes Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban.

From Russia Today, Russia expels 45 diplomats from Poland and 2 from Bulgaria.

From Sputnik International, a U.S. military veteran fighting for Ukraine begs NATO to send weapons or body bags.

From The Moscow Times, Russian teenage soldiers die in Ukraine.

From Romania-Insider, Romania's highest court upholds a six-year prison sentence for former tourism minister Elena Udrea.

From Novinite, red paint is splashed on the Russian embassy in Sofia, Bulgaria.

From The Sofia Globe, Bulgaria joins in the condemnation of Russia's missile attack on a railway station in Kramatorsk, Ukraine.

From Radio Bulgaria, Bulgaria's industrial poultry sector faces bankruptcy due to increasing feed costs.

From the Greek Reporter, Greece launches Europe's largest double-sided solar energy farm.

From Ekathimerini, two Turkish fighter jets fly over the Greek Aegean islands of Oinousses and Panagia.

From the Greek City Times, the Bank of Greece cuts its estimation for economic growth in the country.

From Balkan Insight, Albanian and Kosovo authorities detain over 50 police officers from both countries for alleged bribery and corruption.

From Total Croatia News, exports from and imports into Croatia increased during the first two months of 2022.

From The Slovenia Times, Slovenian Foreign Minister Anže Logar calls for the E.U. to ban natural gas imports from Russia.

From The Malta Independent, in the port of Freeport, Maltese customs officials seize a record-breaking 800 kilos of she-don't-lie.

From Malta Today, Malta will start accepting coronavirus recovery certificates and rapid tests from unvaccinated travelers.

From ANSA, the old government complex in Venice, Italy will be opened to the public for the first time in 500 years.

From SwissInfo, the first delivery of food aid from Switzerland arrives in Ukraine.

From France24, the world of Russian oligarch Konstantin Malofeyev.

From RFI, why the upcoming French presidential election "matters on the world stage".

From The Local FR, police neutralize a "suspicious" package left at the altar of the cathedral in Toulouse, France.

From ReMix, French President Emmanuel Macron accuses Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki of being a "far-right anti-Semite".

From Allah's Willing Executioners, an Islamic migrant in France allegedly rapes 29 minors.  (If you read French, read the story at FDeSouche.)

From El País, the dinosaur that limped around what is now Spain 129 years ago.

From The Portugal News, at least 46 unaccompanied minor refugees have arrived in Portugal from Ukraine.

From Free West Media, U.S. "climate tsar" and former Senator (D-MA) John Kerry predicts 100 million climate refugees heading toward Europe.

From Euractiv, European farmers criticize an E.U. industrial emissions proposal.

From OpIndia, a Muslim family in the Indian state of Uttarakhand is called "Kaafirs" for voting in favor of the Bharatiya Janata Party.  (The Arabic word for non-Muslim is "kaffir", which has been borrowed into other languages.  If you read Hindi, read the story at News18.)

From the South China Morning Post, coronavirus measures in Shanghai, China include cruelty to animals.  (via National Review)

From Gatestone Institute, Turkey shows what happens when there's no free speech.

From The Stream, what the article in Vanity Fair on the coronavirus lab leak theory proved, and didn't.

From The Daily Signal, Geico cancels Muslim speaker Linda Sarsour due to pressure from groups opposing anti-Semitism.

From The American Conservative, the 2020s might be remembered as the decade of deglobalization.

From The Western Journal, Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO) demands answers from Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas about reports of resources allegedly being diverted from the Department of Veteran Affairs to provide services to illegal aliens.

From BizPac Review, President Biden appears to get some geography mixed up.

From The Daily Wire, two defendants charged with conspiracy to kidnap Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer (D) are acquitted, while two others get a hung jury.

From the Daily Caller, independent gubernatorial candidate Michael Shellenberger lays out his plan for a California without Governor Gavin Newsom (D).

From Breitbart, the only gun store in Beverly Hills, California is ordered to close.

From Newsmax, actor Will Smith is banned from the Oscars and other academy events for 10 years.

And from the New York Post, good luck trying to call the IRS.

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